Rev. Fr. Charles Onomhoale Igechi of the Catholic Archdiocese of Benin, Nigeria was shot dead yesterday in Ikpoba on his way back to his place of his primary assignment.
Fr Charles is barely one year in the priesthood. Please kindly pray for the repose of his soul & for justice.
Timely Intervention as Innoson Vehicles Showcases CNG/LNG Powered Vehicles.
Innoson Vehicle Manufacturing has mass-produced varieties of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) Buses, a suitable alternative for Nigerians amidst the rising price of petrol and diesel.
#Innoson#CNG
Imagine a Governor of a State for eight years and these High profile Clerics were murdered by terrorists in his state,and he never for once bothered to visit their families for condolence Or even speak personally on the tragedies.If I don’t find a word bigger than a ��bigot’,I’ll coin it.
Exposed tinubu's Drug Dealing/Money Laundering in the U.S
Uncovered Tinubu's Guinean Passport
Exposed Nigeria Air
He is arguably the BEST Nigerian Investigative Journalist at the moment.
David Hundeyin is his name!
@DavidHundeyin
As I attended my ongoing petition case at the Court of Appeal today, Tuesday, June 6, 2023, judicial correspondents ambushed me at the entrance of the court and demanded that I should talk to them.
You were warned for years about Islamisation and Fulanisation. During Yar'Adua's administration, I warned you, because I realised he was the second governor to adopt Sharia law, just after Zamfara.
When he appointed Lamido Sanusi Lamido as CBN governor, I researched his writings on https://t.co/dA7Z8BNt6t, and saw a thinly disguised jihadist. I warned you. Vanguard Newspaper warned you.
Before Sanusi selected the top.5 Southern-owned banks to take over, and recruited allies amongst the elite and fellow bankers to do the deed, we warned you. We begged the President then to remove him.
He ignored us until Sanusi decided to attack him directly by accusing him of stealing $10b oil funds, then $20b. That was when the danger he represented became apparent to @GEJonathan. It was already too late at that point. He had successfully contributed, SUBSTANTIALLY to the erosion of confidence in that Christian-led government and in the person if the President himself.
When Buhari flagged off the Fulani insurgency during his 2011 electoral campaigns, we saw the dog whistle and warned you. The killings that followed the election have not stopped since, and BH emerged from that confusion.
When Buhari & Marwa went to berate Lam Adesina in his office after aggressive Fulani herdsmen had been repelled in Oke-Ogun by Yoruba farmers, we warned that Buhari must NEVER be allowed into office in Nigeria. Some selfish gits were eyeing his "12 million Northern votes", & instead saw an ally, despite his very public pronouncements on Sharia.
When @elrufai promised to kill anyone who killed a Fulani person, regardless of their offence, we warned you if Fulanisation, but you naively ignored.
When Minister Wike's official warning against allowing schoolchildren in rural areas taking their WAEC exams outside of their state capitals was ignored by Governor Shettima, we shouted, you ignored. #ChibokGirls were kidnapped, and their principal was made State Commissioner for Education by Shettima. We shouted , you ignored.
El-Rufai has spoken publicly now, but you're still ignoring.
Take whatever comes.
I respectfully appeal that they do more to arrest this situation before it deteriorates further. Governments and the security agencies must not allow the nation to continue this drift towards anarchy. I sincerely commiserate with the affected families.
These fatalities are not just numbers, but wastages of sacred human lives; of peoples who lived among us as family members, relatives and friends. While appreciating the efforts of Governments at all levels and security agencies,
The continued horrible spate of all forms of criminality, especially visceral bloodletting and killings, as witnessed recently in Plateau where over 120 people were killed, 50 killed in Sokoto, 31 in Zamfara, and 25 in Benue, are very depressing and extremely worrisome.
It’s a sad day. My country, Sénégal, is in shambles. Protests have broken out everywhere.
I am typing this using a VPN because all social media have been blocked.
I have always known Sénégal to be a peaceful stable democracy. But today, I am confronted with a new reality.
The TLDR of a much more complex problem:
2 years ago, the main opposition party leader was accused of rape. Since then, many protests have been held to denounce it as politically motivated ploy to keep him from running for the presidential election. The fear was that the current president would run for a 3rd term, even though the constitution was recently changed to limit presidents to 2 terms. Over a dozen people have died during these protests. Today, he was acquitted of the rape charges but sentenced to 2 years in prison for “corrupting youth”. Mayhem ensued. Thousands of youths marching and fighting police, demanding that the charges be dropped and that the current president stepped down.
I couldn’t work today. I am not sure what tomorrow is going to be like. On one hand, people out in the streets are exercising their political power to protect democracy. Anarchy is sometimes the only course of action. On the other hand, I fear for my daughter and mourn the peace I once took for granted.
“His mother wanted a break. You know, it’s hectic. She’s a single mother. She just bought a house. It’s a lot taking care of a kid on your own. She thought maybe it would be a good experience for him to come live with Uncle Olasegun for the summer. As soon as she suggested it, I was like: ‘I want to do this.’ And here’s the reason: she did the exact same thing for me. We lost our mom when we were kids. I was really young at the time— like three. Whitney was twelve or thirteen. She and my other sister ended up taking care of me: cooked for me, took me to school, made sure I had a shower, brushed my teeth. Back then I thought she was annoying, because of my ignorance. But now it’s crazy for me to think about. It must have been such a burden. She’d be hanging out with her friends, and I was always there. So I’m just trying to pay it forward. I picked him up from the airport last night. I have no idea how the summer is going to go. I like to cook, so I’ll cook for him. Maybe we’ll paint a little in the evenings. I’m going to teach him some kickboxing on the terrace; hopefully that’ll tire him out so that I can get some work done. I’d love to be a father one day when I find the right woman. So it’s going to be a good test for me. I’m just hoping he has fun. And when he goes back home, he tells his mother all about the amazing summer he had with his uncle.”